Report from Quito

U.S. emigres figuring it out

Observations, oddments, and a second thought

Yesterday we got into an Uber and there, in the back seat, was the driver’s son. Four years old, neither sitting in a car seat nor wearing a seat belt. Just a gorgeous, silent little boy riding along with no protection from the insane Quito traffic apart from the car itself. When we arrived at our destination, the kid shyly offered Bill a high five.

We have seen toddlers without helmets sitting on the laps of people riding motorcycles, and we have seen babies being held by parents in the front seats of moving cars. We have not seen news stories about children dying in road accidents because they weren’t strapped into car seats. I’m sure it happens, but we’ve not seen it on the news.

What we do see on the tv news – we watch TeleAmazonas (TA) via YouTube – is a lot of murder, kidnapping and crime. If it bleeds it leads, in Ecuador as well as in the U.S., and there’s a lot of bloodshed in parts of this country.

The morning team of Andrea and Juan Miguel, both attractive and well dressed young people, is relentlessly cheerful for the first three minutes of every weekday broadcast. We see drone footage of the sun coming up over the Andes, and Andrea typically offers virtual abrazos, or hugs, to her viewers before diving into the uniformly horrific news. Gustavo is their man on the street, who reports live from a series of locations around the center of town. 

TA has run several stories on the back-to-school shopping that kicked into high gear only this last week. School starts here on Sept. 1. In previous years, with different leaders, apparently the government helped assure students had the school supplies and books they needed. Now it’s up to families to pay for their supplies. It’s a boon for papelerías and a pain point for the many families who don’t have $60 (on average) per student to spend on uniforms and other necessities. 

Keep in mind that I don’t understand much of the news and do a lot of extrapolating from the video and the few words I grasp. A news story we have not seen here is mass shootings of children by strangers.

At the mall

Shopping malls are everywhere in Quito. We have been to four or five, and they are never not hopping. The food courts in particular are thronged at every hour, and the available cuisines range from fast food – burgers, deli sandwiches and the hugely popular KFC (pronounced kah effa SAY) – to ceviche to fancy sit-down restaurants (photo below is of a ceviche roll from Noe, a sushi restaurant). Oh, and Starbucks, which arrived in Ecuador only recently and is always busy.

Food courts are a great spot to watch people. At lunch on the last Saturday of the summer, we observed hundreds of Quiteños, mostly families out together. We were in El Jardín, a mall that we’ve heard is more staid and therefore less popular among young people, so there were no clots of teenagers. 

It’s common to see multiple generations out together, the adults often walking arm-in-arm with their elderly parents, teen or tween children, or even their same-sex friends. They all seem to get along. They talk to each other. 

After years of shopping online and going to an actual mall only to return the occasional purchase, I am still astounded to see so many people doing so much in the malls here. I’m unsure how much they actually buy, other than a meal or snack, but malls in Quito seem to be indoor town squares where folks gather to hang out and enjoy each other’s company.

Maybe malls were like this at one time in the U.S. I have faded memories of Chris-Town Mall in the 1960s (“Legions of Phoenix natives can still recall the legendary organ grinder and his passive-aggressive monkey”), with its two-story cages of live parakeets, being a busy and exciting place.

In Quito nobody walks around – anywhere, in a mall or on the street – with soda cans or coffee drinks. We do see a surprising number of folks, including business people on weekdays, walking around with ice cream on a stick or in a cone. 

In our latest mall foray we had three options for buying ice cream within 50 paces of the entrance – and I’m sure there were more. We skipped the frozen offerings from the Cinnabon kiosk; we passed up the ice cream counter at Crepes & Waffles, a popular sit-down restaurant chain. Instead we bought our rich, heavenly scoops, served in dipped cones garnished with a small lozenge of dark chocolate, at Republica del Cacao. 

The second thought

After writing about the excellent medical care I received after my recent accident, I realized I sounded like the classic “expat” – a term we try to not to use about ourselves. “Expat” smells of privilege, of people who could go anywhere but who have gifted this place with their presence and cash, and oh how smart they are to be getting so much more for so much less.

Within a few days of my experience in the Axxis Hospital ER, our friends at TeleAmazonas ran a news story about how organized crime controls public hospitals in parts of Ecuador. The buildings are in foul disrepair, medicines in short supply (although you can sometimes buy them from tents on the sidewalk); medical personnel struggle to provide even basic services, and some patients are desperate for care they have little hope of getting.  

But hey, I received splendid treatment in the private Axxis Hospital and paid my bills with a credit card. It’s great to be an expat!

6 responses to “Observations, oddments, and a second thought”

  1. dreamilyb2d116d188 Avatar
    dreamilyb2d116d188

    Your description of Chris-Town Mall put me in mind of Southdale in the ”60s, it too had a 2-story birdcage and was always full of people. Keep ’em coming, we think of you all often. Bat says tell Bell he totally gets the ball thing …

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    1. lvds Avatar

      Is Batman a fetcher, then? I hope he’s not as reactive as Bella is!

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  2. Connie Avatar

    I am crossing my fingers that I have finally figured out how to use this app! Oh, Chris-Town Mall! My favorite memory, in addition to the disgruntled monkey, was going there after allergy shots when I was younger. I’d get my shots (you have to bribe a kid who gets a shot every week, right?) and mom and I would head to Chris-Town for a slice of pizza and an Orange Julius. The pizza was by far the best pizza I’ve ever eaten. It was on the west side of the mall in this little triangle of an area. If you were looking for libation, you could follow the stairs and go under (I assume) the mall to some kind of bar or such. I never went down there, but the lamp post, which I think had a red light in it, was a very attractive item to a kid of 8 or 9.
    Malls seem to wax and wane in a community. Remember MetroCenter? It was once overflowing with EVERYONE and now it’s gone. In some cities, they turning old malls into office centers or apartments. Interesting.
    I think it’s because people don’t have time. When Josh was little and I stayed home, we had time to go walk thru the mall. Now, I just want to grab what I need and get out of there!
    Are you doing any online learning app? I did Duo Lingo for over 2 years before it glitched on my and I was stuck on one question on one lesson. Their online service is non-existent. It was only after my subscription was up that I got a response to my snippy remarks in response to a “we’re sorry to see you go,” email. Yeah. Right.
    Anyway, a friend who is a Spanish teacher recommended BUSUU. It’s okay. You do get the chance to have native speakers read/listen to your lessons. That’s kind of cool.
    You will settle in; I have no doubt. You just need to break it in, like a shoe. It will happen!

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    1. lvds Avatar

      Bill has been using DuoLingo and it’s helping him. I’ve used Rocket Spanish myself. We also take online classes twice a week with a teacher in Cuenca, which are kind of freewheeling. Do you have any malls near you? Do you go there? There’s no postal service in EC so getting things delivered is costly, so that may bring people out to shop. I just kind of figured all U.S. malls are moribund — fear of getting shot, don’t you know — but maybe I’m wrong about that.

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  3. jstroud441a072e7fe1 Avatar
    jstroud441a072e7fe1

    You are on quite an adventure! Interesting that people hang out in malls. Are they air conditioned? It’s been a beautiful week in Minnesota, with temps in the 70’s. Tomorrow it is supposed to be cooler, so I am starting to think about the transition from summer clothes to pants and tops. Seems a little too early, but we do what we have to do. Hope your injuries are healing up as expected.

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    1. lvds Avatar

      It never occurred to me to wonder if the malls here have AC. Homes don’t, or heat either; at this altitude it’s always spring-like. We arrived at the end of the rainy season, and the dry season has not been bad. Thanks for inquiring about my trip-induced fractures (which seems like way too strong a word). I’m 70% through my PT and nearly pain free — some ongoing swelling and pain in the thumb. Turns out they’re quite handy, thumbs, and a hassle when they’re not fully functioning.

      I will miss switching over to fall/winter clothes — although I see people here in wool coats NOW. Enjoy the flannels and wool, Julie! Thank you for reading and commenting!

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Reflections on leaving the U.S. for a life we can afford — and possibly improved mental health — in Ecuador.